Since brass is made by combining differing amounts of copper and zinc, there is no uniform density per cubic inch. Therefore, you will have to conduct experiments to deduce this amount for yourself.
8.4 gm/cm3
Brass is an alloy of copper and zinc. The relative proportions are varied to make brass with different properties. The different mixes result in different densities, but they are close to 0.3 pounds per cubic inch.
100 Cubic Feet = 1 Brass
The density of brass can vary from 8300 to 8700 kg/m3.
No, copper and brass doesnot have same density.
18.6765 cubic blathinetres is one brass
Because brass is an alloy of copper and zinc and not a compound, it is possible to have many different ratios of the two elements. However, copper has a density of 8.96 g/cm3 and zinc has a density of 7.14 g/cm3. There are 1 million cubic centimeters in a cum (cubic meter), so the weight of 1 cum of brass would be between 7140 kg and 8960 kg.
1 cubic meter = 0354 brass
First, two things. 1) Since brass is a solid at standard temperature and pressure, it is unusual to specify its density in fluid volume units, such as gallons. 2) Brass is an alloy comprising differing amounts of different metals, so its density must be specified as a range. Brass is about 8.5 times denser than water. It has a density of 8.4 to 8.75 grams per cubic centimeter. That translates to 70 to 73 pounds per US gallon.
density is the inverse of specific volume; in this case 1/.001865 = 536.2 pounds per cubic foot
Brass refers to several different alloys whose relative density ranges from 8.4 to 8.73
Brass
It depends on how big the brass is compared to the amount of water. If they are both the same size then they occupy the same volume! If you mean "does brass take up more volume than water for the same weight", then no it does not. The density is a measure of how heavy a substance is for its size, and may be measured in grams per cubic centimetre (equivalent to kilograms per cubic decimetre), kilograms per cubic metre, or some other unit. For water, the density is 1000 kg/m3, but for brass the figure is 8400 to 8700 kg/m3. So one cubic metre of water has a mass of 1000 kg, but the same volume of brass has a mass over eight times higher. To put that another way, one tonne of brass would take up much less space (volume) than one tonne of water.